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GLBTQ gives students a second chance at prom page 7
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UTSA Football Fiesta Spring Game page 8
Independent Student Newspaper for the University of Texas at San Antonio
{SINCE 1981}
Volume 48
Issue 12
{WWW.PAISANO-ONLINE.COM}
WORLD
LAST LIGHT UP
UTSA Former U.S. Congressman Charlie Gonzalez, who represented San Antonio for 14 years, will be donating his Congressional papers to UTSA’s Libraries.
Texas
April 16, 2013
Far East faces threats from North Korea Amanda Dansby Web Assistant
Crystal Poenisch
Contributing Writer news@paisano-online.com
Smoke restrictions begin June 1
North Korea has loaded and fueled at least two mobile ballistic missiles on its eastern coast according to the South Korean news agency Yonhap and satellite imagery obtained by United States intelligence. South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byungse stated that the possibility of a missile launch by the North Korean government, headed by communist dictator Kim Jongun, is “very high.”
Three bills currently in the Texas Legislature – HB 216, HB 313 and SB 315 – would allow individuals to register to vote online.
Texas Targeted
As of press time, two bombs have killed at least 3 and left at least 144 injured at the Boston Marathon Monday, April 15.
Higher Education The House Homeland Security and Public Safety Committee approved, by a 7-1 vote, a bill that would allow guns on college campuses.
History This week in 2000, UTSA announced an academic restructuring plan that would, among other things, expand the number of colleges from four to six.
Sports The UTSA softball team will play at home against Seattle April 19 and 20. Baseball will host Sacramento State April 19-21.
news@paisano-online.com
Starting June 1, UTSA will make all of its campuses smoke-free and tobacco-free environments. This process will be carried out by the UTSA Tobacco-Free Task Force, who will make all three UTSA campuses smoke-free by June 1, 2014, according to official statements by UTSA Today. “The UTSA Staff Council has worked for several years for common ground on a tobacco-free and/or smoking ban on campus. The Council has also discussed how UTSA might implement the new policy to achieve the best possible outcome,” said the UTSA Staff Council Chair Gregory Frieden. “Ultimately, this is a health issue. We want all faculty, staff and students to be healthy.” Changes to UTSA’s smoking policy have been ongoing since 2012. As a result of several research grants received from the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT), several buildings on campus became smokefree areas on Aug. 31, 2012 due to the CPRIT policy, which requires buildings housing CPRIT-funded research to be smoking-free. Buildings affected include the Biotechnology Building, Sciences and Engineering Building, Applied Engineering and Technology Building on the UTSA Main Campus and the Monterey Building on the UTSA Downtown Campus. Along with those changes, President Ricardo Romo also established the UTSA Tobacco-Free Task Force, whose goal was to update UTSA’s guidelines on smoking in the university’s Handbook of Operating Procedures (HOP). “Many state institutions have been tobacco-free for many years. I believe that as a state institution, we should do
Will Tallent / The Paisano
U.S.
Erin Boren and David Glickman Editor and News Assistants
See SMOKING, Page 2
NATION
Arkansas pipeline bursts, leaked tar sands soil area Aaron Zachary
Contributing Writer news@paisano-online.com In Arkansas last month, a 22 foot long, 2 inch wide rupture fromed in the 65-year-old Pegaus pipeline. Over several days, the pipeline dumped thousands of gallons of oil into residential Mayflower, causing evacuations of 22 homes and soiling about 6,000 cubic feet of land. State Attorney General Dustin McDaniel said Wednesday, April 10, “The pipeline rupture is substantially larger than many of us initially thought.... We still do not know how much oil was released. We still do not know the exact makeup of the crude itself, of the chemical solvents used in the transportation process.” While monetary damages are not yet known, health in and
around the 22-house evacuation zone may be on the decline. Several cases seem to contradict Exxon’s reports that the air is safe to breathe outside the cleanup area. Sherry Appleman, who lives outside the evacuation zone on Lake Conway, said that on the night of the leak she “couldn’t breathe” and that her “throat and nose and eyes were burning really bad.” According to the Huffington Post. April Lane, chair of school health and safety with the Faulkner County Concerned Citizens Advisory Group, has performed her own investigation of the air quality. “A lot of the released chemicals—benzene, hydrogen sulfide, toluene—are still extremely toxic, especially to children, the elderly and pregnant women, at very low levels….Claiming that the air is okay is simply inappropriate and unsafe,” said Lane, ac-
cording the Huffington Post. At the center of all this is the Northern Route Approval Act. The act would approve TransCanada Corp’s proposed pipeline, which would cross the Canadian-United States border and carry oil from Canada’s oil sands, the world’s 3rd richest oil deposit, through the rest of the already approved sections of the Keystone XL pipeline. The pipeline would start in Nebraska and transport the crude tar sands to refineries in Texas. Environmental and national concerns have kept the bill in a nearly four-year hiatus in Congress, including a veto in 2012 by President Obama because, according to The New York Times, he was not given enough time to adequately review it. Environmental activists are urging the Obama administration to extend the public review from 45 days to something more
apt to help weigh the economic benefits against the environmental impacts. The Sierra Club, the Natural Resources Defense Council and 350.org, are at the forefront, calling for 120 days of public review in light of the spill. “A 45-day comment period ... is entirely inappropriate in light of so many unanswered questions surrounding the Mayflower disaster,” the green organizations wrote in a public letter to the U.S. State Department. On the opposite end of the pipeline lie Texas refineries. If the Keystone XL pipeline is approved, the same type of oil and tar sands that were spilled in Mayflower would be transported through the Lone Star State. The Senate and House are both in the process of approving the Keystone XL pipeline. A final decision is expected by July, or August.
Texas residents were startled to find out that North Korean leader Kim Jong-un was aiming missiles at several U.S. cities. According to a war room map, Austin, Texas was among those targeted cities, which also included Los Angeles, Calif. and New York City, N.Y. according to CNN. “Austin, Texas is a very important city in America,” Gov. Rick Perry said in an online interview with CBS. “Anytime you have a country that has access to nuclear weapons, you need to treat it as a very real threat.” “Economically what has happened in Texas over the last decade has made this city an epicenter for a lot of technology, a lot of economic development, and I think the individuals in North Korea understand that Austin, Texas is now a very important city in America as do corporate CEOs and other people who are moving here in record numbers,” stated Gov. Perry. Aaron Marsales, a junior business management major stated, “It doesn’t really faze me at all, it’s Korea. I heard they did this like ten years ago too. I really don’t know what to think about it other than I think it’s a joke.” Brian Rhodes, a senior anthropology major, also thinks that the threats on Austin are . “I just don’t think it’s going to happen. They don’t even have the technology to do it at this point. My whole theory is that Kim Jongun is basically trying to bolster his reputation with people, kind of, solidify his position by making the rest of the world fear his country so he’s blowing a lot of smoke,” stated Rhodes. Rhodes continued, “I think that a lot of it is a big smoke screen. I think they also wanted to get a lot of the embargoes raised, for instance, the US to trade with them by saying ‘hey look now we’re a major nuclear power etcetera, but it doesn’t scare me much.” Instructor for English for International Students at UTSA Bonnie Smith had a few words to say about the situation, as well. “I think that North Korea is like a spoiled child wanting attention. We always give them money, and then the government always uses it on their ridiculous agenda,” stated Smith. See KOREA, Page 3